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Republicans senators are debating adding a repeal of ObamaCare's individual mandate, which fines people for not having insurance, into their tax bill as they race to finalize the proposal.

“I can't speak for the House, but in the Senate, we're considering that. I think they're whipping it today actually, and there's a chance that might get in there,” Sen. David Perdue (R-Ga.) told reporters early Wednesday evening.

Senate Republicans are expected to unveil their tax bill — including a detailed proposal but no actual legislative text — on Thursday during a special 11:30 a.m. caucus meeting.

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The timeline gives them less than a day to sort out the health-care fight. If they don’t, it could return at next week's Finance Committee mark up, or once the tax plan reaches the Senate floor when any senator could bring up repeal as an amendment.

Asked if he supports including it, the No. 2 Senate Republican — who has previously warned against making tax reform more complicated — said he wants to be able to pass a bill.

Conservatives have been clamoring to use the tax plan to nix ObamaCare’s individual mandate after Republicans failed to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) separately told reporters on Wednesday that Senate Republicans were “whipping,” or measuring support within the caucus, on including the repeal provision.

A Congressional Budget Office analysis released Wednesday found that repealing the individual mandate would save $338 billion over 10 years but would lead to 4 million more uninsured Americans by 2019 and 13 million by 2027.

President Trump has backed using the tax bill to nix the individual mandate, though the initial version of the House tax plan, unveiled last week, didn’t include the provision.

Republicans have a narrow path to get their tax plan through the Senate. With a 52-seat majority they can only afford to lose two GOP senators and still let Vice President Pence break a tie, assuming every Democrat and independent votes "no."

And including an individual mandate repeal could draw blowback from moderate senators.